Month: October 2011

“The monster showed up just after midnight. As they do.” I read A Monster Calls and Brian Selznick’s Wonderstruck back-to-back, and they seemed eerily similar in more ways than one. My original plan was to review them together, but after writing my review for Wonderstruck, I realized that although A Monster Calls is also a […]

This week, instead of featuring a “Read Me!” book, I am enthusiastically recommending the new FX show American Horror Story. Although it has already been on for a month, this Monday on Halloween you have the chance to play catch up and watch the first four episodes back-to-back if you haven’t seen it. American Horror Story is […]

The wonderfully inventive Brian Selznick broke new ground in 2007 with The Invention of Hugo Cabret, a “children’s” book that combined text and illustrations in a way that had never really been done before. In fact, half the book is text and the other half full-spread illustrations, and the illustrated passages tell just as much […]

As promised last week, I am featuring Colson Whitehead’s newest, Zone One, in bookstores and online today. Arriving on the heals of season two of The Walking Dead (AMC), Zone One is a Zombie Novel, one I am very excited to read. Yes folks, zombies are everywhere. The trend is alive and well and not […]

I love Entertainment Weekly. I even subscribe to it. But I’ve noticed something disturbing lately, and I want to explain myself. Entertainment Weekly covers the Big Four of entertainment: Movies, TV, Music and Books. I love movies and TV. And if you’ve read any of this blog before, you know I love books. (I love […]

Jeffrey Eugenides is one of those writers who takes his time writing books, and it shows. His first book was The Virgin Suicides, a creepy and sad little story set in the 70’s that was made into an extremely creepy and sad movie. His second book, Middlesex, won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2003, and is […]

October is the perfect month to talk about scary stories. It’s also the perfect time to mention Stephen King, without doubt one of America’s modern masters of horror. (I’m pretty sure someone else came up with that title.) Say what you will about Steve (yes, I am claiming the right to call him “Steve”), he […]

Fall is always a busy time for publishing, it seems. Best-selling authors oftentimes release their latest and greatest in the fall. I mean, when was the last time Stephen King didn’t release a novel in October or November? (And yes, he has a new novel coming out this fall. More on that later.) This week […]